The Museum off Modern Art...The Museum of Modern Art THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION April 20 - May 30, 1989...

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The Museum off Modern Art For Immediate Release April 1989 THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION April 20 - May 30, 1989 Opening at The Museum of Modern Art on April 20, 1989, THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION is the first exhibition of its kind to examine television as a forum for the contemporary arts. This international survey of videotapes by sixty-seven artists is presented in weekly thematic programs: dance, music, theater, literature, video imaging, and experimental television (schedule attached). The exhibition is on view through May 30 in the Edward John Noble Education Center. Created between 1966 and 1987, the videos represented in the exhibition are examples of alternative programming produced specially for television. These include American productions from WGBH-TV, Boston; WNET-TV, New York; and KTCA-TV, San Francisco; and programs from Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, and Yugoslavia. Tapes range in length from three minutes to over an hour. In Dance For Television (April 20 - 25), nine tapes demonstrate the use of television's abstract space. Included are works by choreographers Trisha Brown, James Byrne, Merce Cunningham, and Mary Lucier, among others. Music For Television (April 27 - May 2) presents sixteen works by such videomakers as Laurie Anderson, Robert Ashley, Kit Fitzgerald, and Robert Longo, who examine music as a means to liberate the image from narrative constraint. In Theater For Television (May 4 - 9 ) , producers Magazzini Criminali, The Wooster Group, and Robert Wilson challenge the traditional rules of drama and stage production by experimenting with the medium of video. Among the seven -more- 11 West 53 Street, New York, NY. 10019-5498 Tel: 212-708-9400 Cable: MODERNART Telex: 62370 MODART

Transcript of The Museum off Modern Art...The Museum of Modern Art THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION April 20 - May 30, 1989...

  • The Museum off Modern Art

    For Immediate Release April 1989

    THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION

    April 20 - May 30, 1989

    Opening at The Museum of Modern Art on April 20, 1989, THE ARTS FOR

    TELEVISION is the first exhibition of its kind to examine television as a forum

    for the contemporary arts. This international survey of videotapes by

    sixty-seven artists is presented in weekly thematic programs: dance, music,

    theater, literature, video imaging, and experimental television (schedule

    attached). The exhibition is on view through May 30 in the Edward John Noble

    Education Center.

    Created between 1966 and 1987, the videos represented in the exhibition

    are examples of alternative programming produced specially for television.

    These include American productions from WGBH-TV, Boston; WNET-TV, New York; and

    KTCA-TV, San Francisco; and programs from Austria, Belgium, France, Germany,

    Great Britain, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, and Yugoslavia. Tapes range in

    length from three minutes to over an hour.

    In Dance For Television (April 20 - 25), nine tapes demonstrate the use of

    television's abstract space. Included are works by choreographers Trisha

    Brown, James Byrne, Merce Cunningham, and Mary Lucier, among others. Music For

    Television (April 27 - May 2) presents sixteen works by such videomakers as

    Laurie Anderson, Robert Ashley, Kit Fitzgerald, and Robert Longo, who examine

    music as a means to liberate the image from narrative constraint.

    In Theater For Television (May 4 - 9 ) , producers Magazzini Criminali, The

    Wooster Group, and Robert Wilson challenge the traditional rules of drama and

    stage production by experimenting with the medium of video. Among the seven

    -more-11 West 53 Street, New York, NY. 10019-5498 Tel: 212-708-9400 Cable: MODERNART Telex: 62370 MODART

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    works included are Samuel Beckett's He Joe (1966) and Wilson's Deafman Glance

    (1981). In Literature For Television (May 11 - 16), Ivo Andric, Joan Jonas,

    and Ed Rankus are among those artists who explore ways in which television and

    the written word can be integrated.

    The Video Image (May 18 - 23) presents eleven tapes and features Bill

    Viola's Chott el-Djerid (A Portrait in Light and Heat) (1979), a recording of

    how the electronic eye reacts to extreme heat and extreme light. Not

    Necessarily Television (May 25 - 30) consists of fifteen works, including

    Martha Rosler's If It's Too Bad to be True, It Could be Disinformation (1985),

    examining television news broadcasts. Other artists represented in this

    section include Nam June Paik, Ilene Segalove, and Richard Serra.

    THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION was coorganized by Dorine Mignot, curator,

    Department of Painting, Sculpture, and Video Art, the Stedelijk Museum,

    Amsterdam; and Kathy Rae Huffman, curator/producer, Contemporary Art Television

    (CAT) Fund, Boston; with the participation of Julie Lazar, the Museum of

    Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. The exhibition was organized for The Museum of

    Modern Art by Barbara London, assistant curator, Video, Department of Film.

    This exhibition is funded in part by a grant from The Polaroid Corporation

    on the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary. The Museum's video programs are

    made possible by grants from the New York State Council on the Arts and the

    National Endowment for the Arts and are also supported by the Sony Corporation

    of America.

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    No. 38

    For further information or video stills, contact Sarah Eaton, film press representative, Department of Public Information, 212/708-9750.

  • The Museum of Modern Art

    THE ARTS FOR TELEVISION

    April 20 - May 30, 1989

    Viewing Schedule

    DANCE FOR TELEVISION April 20 - 25 at 1:00 p.m.

    Merce by Merce by Paik (1975). Charles Atlas/Merce Cunningham/Nam June Paik/Shigeko Kubota. 30 minutes

    Dancing on the Edge (1980-81). Trisha Brown. 29 minutes

    Portrait (1983). Hans Van Manen. 10 minutes

    Repetitions (1984). Marie Andre. 45 minutes

    Ex-Romance (1984-87). Charles Atlas. 50 minutes

    Visual Shuffle (1986). John Sanborn/Mary Perillo. 7 minutes

    Lament (1985). James Byrne/Eiko & Koma. 9 minutes

    If I Could Fly, I Would Fly (1987). Mary Lucier. 25 minutes

    Waterproof (1986). Jean-Louis Le Tacon. 22 minutes

    MUSIC FOR TELEVISION April 27 - May 2 at 1:00 p.m.

    0 Superman (1981). Laurie Anderson. 9 minutes

    Ear to the Ground (1982). John Sanborn/Kit Fitzgerald. 5 minutes

    Rene and Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After the War (1984). Joan Logue 4 minutes

    To Sorrow (1984). Kit Fitzgerald. 5 minutes

    Bizarre Love Triangle (1987). Robert Longo. 4 minutes

    You Ain't Fresh (1986). Julia Hayward. 4 minutes

    1 Want Some Insecticide (1986). Brenda Miller. 4 minutes

    11 West 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019-5498 Tel: 212-708-9400 Cable: MODERNART Telex: 62370 MODART

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    Imagine (1987). Zbigniew Rybyczynski. 3 minutes

    Soul Soldier (1987). Charles Jevremovic/Lisa Montrose. 9 minutes

    The Commission (1983). Woody Vasulka. 45 minutes

    Music Word Fire and I Would Do It Again (The Lessons) (1981). Robert Ashley. 30 minutes

    The Kiss (An Operatic Duet) (1984). Paul Richards/Michael Nyman. 9 minutes

    As If Memories Could Deceive Me (1986). Marcel Odenbach. 18 minutes

    The Flood (1985). Jaap Drupsteen. 25 minutes

    Walzer (1985). Gabor Body. 3 minutes

    Johnny (1985). Patrick De Geetere/Catherine Maes. 30 minutes

    THEATER FOR TELEVISION May 4 - 9 at 1:00 p.m.

    Die Hamletmaschine (1983-84). Peter Henning/Werner Gerber. 52 minutes

    Deafman Glance (1981). Robert Wilson. 27 minutes

    Flaubert Dreams of Travel But The Illness of His Mother Prevents It (1986). Ken Kobland/Elizabeth LeCompte. 19 minutes

    Crollo Nervoso (1981). Magazzini Criminali. 55 minutes

    He Joe (1966). Samuel Beckett. 29 minutes

    Tongues (1982). Shirley Clarke. 20 minutes

    Prologo (1985). Giorgio Barberio Corsetti/Studio Azzurro. 25 minutes

    LITERATURE FOR TELEVISION May 11 - 16 at 1:00 p.m.

    Double Lunar Dogs (1984). Joan Jonas. 25 minutes

    URA ARU (The Backside Exists) (1986). Gary Hill. 29 minutes

    Rianon (1984). Slobodan Pesic. 48 minutes

    Danilo Kis (1985). Boris Milijkovic. 7 minutes

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    The End of the Comedy (1986). Ivo Andric. 60 minutes

    Pour Jean-Marc, Passe-Murailles (1984). Richard Kalisz. 30 minutes

    Choses Vues: Voyage (1985). Jean-Paul Fargier. 7 minutes

    A TV Dante - Canto V (1985). Peter Greenaway/Tom Phillips. 14 minutes

    She Heard Voices (1986). Edward Rankus. 10 minutes

    THE VIDEO IMAGE May 18 - 23 at 1:00 p.m.

    Land Art (1969). Gerry Schum. 35 minutes

    Chanoyu (1983). Sanja Ivekovic/Dalibor Martinis. 11 minutes

    City of Angels (1983). Marina Abromivic/Ulay. 18 minutes

    Chott el-Djerid (A Portrait in Light and Heat) (1979). Bill Viola. 28 minutes

    Mt. Fuji (1984). Ko Nakajima. 20 minutes

    Ecology: Ocean (1986). Yoichiro Kawaguchi. 6 minutes

    Ronde de Nuit (1984). Jean-Claude Riga. 14 minutes

    L'Image (1987). Jacques-Louis/Daniele Nyst. 42 minutes

    EETC (1986). David Larcher. 69 minutes

    The Meaning of the Interval (1987). Edin Velez. 19 minutes

    The Damnation of Faust (1983-87). Dara Birnbaum. 21 minutes

    NOT NECESSARILY TELEVISION May 25 - 30 at 12:00 p.m.

    TV as a Fireplace (1968). Jan Dibbets. 24 minutes

    Grimoire Magnetique (1982). Joelle de la Casiniere. 26 minutes

    Kobold's Gesange (1986). Klaus Vom Bruch. 5 minutes

    Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman (1987). Dara Birnbaum. 7 minutes

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    If It's Too Bad To Be True, It Could Be DISINFORMATION (1985). Martha Rosier. 17 minutes

    Great Mother (Sachiko) (1984). Mako Idemitsu. 19 minutes

    More TV Stories: The Pastrami Sandwich and The Forbidden Channel (1985). Ilene Segalove. 5 minutes

    The Games (Olympic Variations) (1984-86). Michel Auder. 25 minutes

    Slogans (American) (1987). Antonio Muntadas. 8 minutes

    Joan Does Dynasty (1986). Joan Braderman. 31 minutes

    Death Valley Days (1985). Gorilla Tapes. 15 minutes

    Shut The Fuck Up (1985). General Idea. 19 minutes

    Killer (1986). Gusztav Hamos. 8 minutes

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